The Thomas Coram Foundation (also known as the Foundling Hospital) and Museum, Brunswick Square, London

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Details

Accessibility

https://foundlingmuseum.org.uk/visit-us/access/

  • The Museum does not have a dedicated car park
  • Visitors with a Blue Badge for disabled parking may park outside the Museum on the single yellow line for up to 3 hours, or in the residents’ bays opposite the entrance. Blue Badges must be displayed at all times.
  • On Sundays parking is free in the spaces directly in front of the Museum, although space is limited

We welcome any feedback or ideas for improving access at the Museum. Please do get in touch with our Visitor Engagement Manager on +44 (0)20 7841 3600 or email tabitha@foundlingmuseum.org.uk

  • Most of our toilets are gender neutral and have separate cubicles with sinks
  • We have two wheelchair accessible toilets, located on the ground floor and lower ground floor. Both are fitted with a pull cord alarm
  • We do not have a changing places toilet
  • We have a lift to all floors. The dimensions are: width 80cm, height 200cm, length 140cm
  • There is a ramp leading to the front door
  • We have one non-motorised wheelchair available to borrow
  • To reserve the wheelchair please call our Visitor Engagement Manager on 020 7841 3600 or email tabitha@foundlingmusuem.org.uk. If possible please give us 1 week’s notice
  • Unfortunately we cannot provide assistance for using the wheelchair. Should you need assistance we recommend bringing a friend with you who will be admitted free of charge
  • We do permit mobility scooters, but please note the width restrictions of the lift
  • Visitors can sit on the green chairs and pews located on all floors
  • We have lightweight folding chairs available for use by visitors, there are 9 in total. These are located next to the lift on all floors except the 2nd floor. Please help yourself
  • Visitors are very welcome to bring their own folding stools if preferred "

Brief description

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foundling_Museum

2025: "The Foundling Museum in Brunswick SquareLondon, tells the story of the Foundling HospitalBritain's first home for children at risk of abandonment. The museum houses the nationally important Foundling Hospital Collection as well as the Gerald Coke Handel Collection, an internationally important collection of material relating to Handel and his contemporaries. After a major building refurbishment, the museum was reopened to the public in June 2004.

The museum explores the history of the Foundling Hospital, which continues today as the children's charity Coram.[4] Artists such as William Hogarth and the composer George Frideric Handel are central to the Hospital story and today the museum celebrates the ways in which creative people have helped improve children's lives for over 275 years. It is a member of The London Museums of Health & Medicine group.[5]

The museum is responsible for the care and maintenance of two collections – the Foundling Hospital Collection and the Foundling Museum Collection, which includes the Gerald Coke Handel Collection. These Collections span the eighteenth to the twentieth century, enabling visitors to make connections between the past and the present. The Foundling Hospital Collection includes works of art by some of Britain's most prominent eighteenth-century artists: William HogarthThomas GainsboroughJoshua ReynoldsLouis-Francois Roubiliac and many others. These paintings and sculptures, donated by the artists themselves, were given in order to support the Foundling Hospital and effectively made the institution the UK's first public art gallery.[4]

The museum's Collections also encompass everyday objects used in the Foundling Hospital and archival materials; books, documents and records, musical scores and librettos, photographs and oral history recordings, as well as clocks, furniture and interiors, many of which were created especially for the hospital and donated by their makers. Some of the most moving objects are the Foundling Hospital tokens – including coins, buttons, jewellery and poems – left by mothers with their babies on admission, enabling the Foundling Hospital to match a mother with her child should she ever return to claim it. The overwhelming majority of the children never saw their mothers again and the tokens are in the care of the museum.[9]


The Committee Room, a reconstruction of one of the original Hospital interiors, is one of the rooms where mothers intending to leave their babies would be interviewed for suitability. It now displays paintings, sculpture and furniture, including Hogarth's satirical and political The March of the Guards to Finchley and a series of paintings by the nineteenth-century artist Emma Brownlow, depicting scenes from the lives of the children in the Foundling Hospital.[10]

The Picture Gallery is a reconstruction of the original Picture Gallery in the West Wing of the hospital. On the walls are paintings of governors and Hospital officials through the ages. These portraits include William Hogarth's magnificent painting of Thomas CoramAllan Ramsay’s portrait of Dr Richard Mead, Reynolds' portrait of the Earl of Dartmouth, and Thomas Hudson’s portrait of the hospital's architect, Theodore Jacobsen.[11]

The Court Room is where the Foundling Hospital's Governors conducted their committee business and entertained important guests. This room is one of the best surviving Rococo interiors in London, with a magnificent plasterwork ceiling given as a gift to the hospital by plasterer William Wilton. Paintings include Hogarth's Moses before Pharaoh’s Daughter and Gainsborough's picture of London's Charterhouse.[12]

The uppermost floor of the Foundling Museum houses the Gerald Coke Handel Collection. Visitors can learn about Handel's connection to the Foundling Hospital and see his Will he left behind, alongside manuscripts and printed scores, books, works of art, programmes and ephemera. A fair copy of Handel's Messiah, left to the hospital at his death, is also displayed. Four armchairs with built-in speakers play nine hours of Handel's music.[13]"

Address

Foundling Museum

40 Brunswick Square

London

WC1N 1AZ

Email

enquiries@foundlingmuseum.org.uk

Phone

Visitor Engagement Manager on 020 7841 3600 

Website

https://www.coram.org.uk/about-us/our-heritage-foundling-hospital

https://foundlingmuseum.org.uk/about/our-history/coram/

Directions

"We're a 4 minute walk from Russell Square underground station, and a 10 minute walk from King's Cross St Pancras and Euston stations"

Opening Times

Always check with the venue directly for up-to-date information including opening times and admission charges as they may be subject to change

2025: "Opening hours

Monday Closed
Tuesday 10am - 5pm
Wednesday 10am - 5pm
Thursday 10am - 5pm
Friday 10am - 5pm
Saturday 10am - 5pm
Sunday 11am - 5pm

Check closures before booking. "

Transport


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NB London ULTRA-LOW EMISSION ZONE

This started on 8 April 2019 in the Central London Congestion Charge Zone, and will extend to the whole of the London area within the M25 Motorway from 25 October 2021.
For more details please see: https://tfl.gov.uk/modes/driving/check-your-vehicle-35896

Vehicles registered with a 'disabled' or 'disabled passenger vehicles' tax class will benefit from a grace period after the ULEZ starts until 26 October 2025 as long as their vehicle doesn't change tax class, and this also applies to a 'disabled' vehicle registered outside the UK.